Jung, John, 1937-
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person
Jung, John, 1937-
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Name :
Jung, John, 1937-
Jung, John
Name Components
Name :
Jung, John
Jung, John R.
Name Components
Name :
Jung, John R.
ユング, ジョン
Name Components
Name :
ユング, ジョン
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Biographical History
John Jung was born to the only Chinese immigrant family in Macon, Georgia in 1937. He moved with his family to the San Francisco when he was fifteen and remained in the Bay Area while he completed his BA at the University of California, Berkeley. After earning his PhD at Northwestern University in Illinois, Jung returned to California as a Professor of Psychology at California State University, Long Beach where he served as department chair for several years in the 1970s and published numerous papers, reports, and textbooks on memory, motivation, research ethics, research methodology and the psychology of alcohol and other drugs. Additionally, Jung served as Director of Career Opportunities in Research (COR), a mentoring program for minority students funded by the National Institute of Mental Health from 1981-2006; Director of, Career Opportunities in Research and Education (CORET) funded by the National Institute of Mental Health from 1997-2006; and the Faculty Research Coordinator (1996-2002) for the McNair Scholars Program, funded by the U.S. Department of Education to mentor low-income students who are first in their families to attend college or come from underrepresented groups so they may pursue Ph.D. studies. He also became a Western Psychological Association Fellow in 1995. In 2002, Jung reduced his course load to half time as he prepared for retirement. During this time he began to reflect on many issues, including his ethnic identity as a Chinese American. In an attempt to understand how his ethnic identity was formed, Jung wrote the memoir Southern Fried Rice: Life in A Chinese Laundry in the Deep South, which he self-published in 2005. The memoir was well-received and Jung has since published two more books documenting the Chinese experience in America, Chinese Laundries: Tickets to Survival on Gold Mountain and Chopsticks in the Land of Cotton: Lives of Mississippi Delta Chinese Grocers. As of 2012, Jung is Professor of Psychology Emeritus and completed his fourth book on the Chinese American experience, Sweet and Sour: Life in Chinese Family Restaurants which was published in 2010.
Historical Background
John Jung was born to the only Chinese immigrant family in Macon, Georgia in 1937. He moved with his family to the San Francisco when he was fifteen and remained in the Bay Area while he completed his BA at the University of California, Berkeley. After earning his PhD at Northwestern University in Illinois, Jung returned to California as a Professor of Psychology at California State University, Long Beach where he served as department chair for several years in the 1970s and published numerous papers, reports, and textbooks on memory, motivation, research ethics, research methodology and the psychology of alcohol and other drugs. Additionally, Jung served as Director of Career Opportunities in Research (COR), a mentoring program for minority students funded by the National Institute of Mental Health from 1981-2006; Director of, Career Opportunities in Research and Education (CORET) funded by the National Institute of Mental Health from 1997-2006; and the Faculty Research Coordinator (1996-2002) for the McNair Scholars Program, funded by the U.S. Department of Education to mentor low-income students who are first in their families to attend college or come from underrepresented groups so they may pursue Ph.D. studies. He also became a Western Psychological Association Fellow in 1995.
In 2002, Jung reduced his course load to half time as he prepared for retirement. During this time he began to reflect on many issues, including his ethnic identity as a Chinese American. In an attempt to understand how his ethnic identity was formed, Jung wrote the memoir Southern Fried Rice: Life in A Chinese Laundry in the Deep South, which he self-published in 2005. The memoir was well-received and Jung has since published two more books documenting the Chinese experience in America, Chinese Laundries: Tickets to Survival on Gold Mountain and Chopsticks in the Land of Cotton: Lives of Mississippi Delta Chinese Grocers . As of 2012, Jung is Professor of Psychology Emeritus and completed his fourth book on the Chinese American experience, Sweet and Sour: Life in Chinese Family Restaurants which was published in 2010.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/22358800
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50038769
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n50038769
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eng
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Southeast Asian Americans
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Americans
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>